Photo: Getty Images   
 Like 
we mentioned the other day,  there’s no shortage of fashion based reality television shows hitting  networks this fall.  Project Runway, America’s Next Top Model and even  (in some ways) The Hills, set off a spate of imitators and as fashion  embraces the internet and becomes more accessible there’s an increasing  demand for an inside look at this seemingly glamorous industry. Some shows, like Joe Zee’s 
All on the Line,  really do document reality. Real designers meet with real buyers and  editors for truthful discussions about the very real future of their  brands while others, like The Hills, put real people in contrived  situations, throw in some guidance and in-front-of-the-camera advice and  just let the cameras roll.  But when the whole thing is fake—or the  most important parts—do you even want to watch? 
Fashion Star,  the Project Runway-like competition Elle Macpherson’s hosting on NBC,  features a panel of judges that includes reps from both H&M and Saks  Fifth Avenue. They’re supposed to be buyers, and the show is calling  them buyers, but Nicole Christie is actually the Director of  Communications for H&M in North America and Terron E. Schaefer is  the Executive Vice President of Saks—you don’t have to work in fashion  to know that a buyer and a marketing officer do very different things.   (The third buyer, Caprice Willard, really is a buyer for Macy’s.) Do you care if so little of the show is based in reality? Or will you  watch anyway?